Friday, May 8, 2026
This Is Where the Serpent Lives by Daniyal Mueenuddin is a very good novel. Like almost all novels set in Southeast Asia (Pakistan in this particular case), it deals with corrpution, abuse of power, the way the caste system holds people back, and disapointment and failure at trying to get ahead in society while assuming that one is owed more in life and is justified in trying to take it illegally. The story is built around one of the major landowner/political families. They have an impressive mansion in the city and a huge farm with and impressive mansion there, too. The farm has always been run like in feudal times with peasants living in a village there while being totally dependent upon the landowner, being taken advantage of by the landowner, and often abused by him. The main characters are two of the peasants from different generations who have shown themselves to be worthy of trust, two generations of the landowners, and the farm manager for both of those generations. One of the favored peasants has become the personal driver of the landowners--first the one of his youth and then of the son who has inherited the estate later. The other favored peasant has proven himself as intellectually talented and has become a favorite of the wife of the new generation of the owners. Times seem to be changing in general for many Pakistanis. The newer generations of landowners/politicians have been in the USA or England for higher education and are not as crude nor as willfully mean toward their villagers and many people living in the cities seem to be progressing better economically. For landowners, their experiences in Western societies and aversion to the harsh tactics used by their parents with their servants have made it easier for the persons they trust. Stealing through corrutpion is rising to higher lives as those who become more educated or successful strive to take more and more advantage opportunities to do so in hopes of becoming rich themselves. The book isn't a specific story just about these specific characters, it is a story of what life has been like for generations in India, Pakistan, and other southeast Asian countries and of how resistent the rulers are to change there even though resentment continues to build among the peasants about their state in life. I gave the book 4 1/2 stars out of 5.